A heat roller for an electrophotographic device comprised of an internal tube inside an insulating layer wherein a heating element having a resistance member is fixed to the outer surface of the insulating layer by depositing the resistance member onto a polyimide film applied to the insulating layer, depositing the resistance member directly to insulating layer, or embedding the resistance member in the insulating layer. Alternatively, the heating element having a resistance member is fixed to the outer surface of the internal tube by depositing the resistance member onto a polyimide film applied to the internal tube, thereby eliminating the insulating layer. An elastomer layer of predetermined thickness is overmolded to the outer surface of the insulating layer or the internal tube and an outside surface is applied to the outer surface of the elastomer layer wherein a toner image is fused on paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
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19. A heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device, said heat roller comprising;
an internal tube formed from plastic;
a heating element having a resistance member directly fixed to the internal tube proximate to an outer surface thereof;
an elastomer layer of predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the internal tube; and
an outside surface applied to an outer surface of the elastomer layer,
wherein a toner image is fused on a paper from the outside surface by a heat transferred from the heating element.
9. A heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device, said heat roller comprising
an internal tube;
a rigid insulating layer
adhered to an outer surface of the internal tube;
a heating element having a resistance member directly fixed to the rigid insulating layer proximate to an outer surface thereof;
an elastomer layer of a predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the insulating layer; and
an outside surface applied to an outer surface of the elastomer layer,
wherein a toner image is fused on a paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
1. A heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device, said heat roller comprising;
an internal tube;
an insulating layer having an inner surface adhered to an outer surface of the internal tube;
a heating element adhered to an outer surface of the insulating layer, said heating element having a polyimide member and a resistance member deposited onto an outer surface of the polyimide member;
an elastomer layer of predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the polyimide member; and
an outside surface applied to an outer surface of the elastomer layer,
wherein a toner image is fused on a paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
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14. The heat roller of
15. The heat roller of
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17. The heat roller of
18. The heat roller of
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None.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to image forming devices, and more particularly, to a heat roller in a fuser of an electrophotographic image forming device.
2. Description of the Related Art
An image forming machine, such as a printer, copier, fax machine, all-in-one device or multifunctional device, typically includes a heating device, such as a fuser, to fix a developing agent, such as toner, to a media sheet. Most commonly, this is achieved with a two-roll fuser, wherein two rollers are coated with some sort of compliant material and both are coated with a release agent such as a Teflon® sleeve are brought into contact with some force, and the paper is fed between them. One roller is driven and one roller is idling, and one or both rollers is/are heated internally by means of a radiant heater, or sometimes inductive heating. Roll fusers are a well developed technology, frequently yielding good performance in terms of speed and quality of the fused image. The drawback is they have a high thermal mass, which translates to long warm-up times and higher energy consumption at startup. An alternate method of fusing is belt fusing. In a belt fusing system, a long, thin, flat heater, often made of ceramic, is supported by a rigid frame. A thin cylindrical metal tube, coated with a thin layer of compliant material and a release agent, encases the heater and frame assembly. The belt assembly is forcibly brought into contact with a driven compliant roll similar to that found in a two-roll fuser, and the paper is fed between the belt and roll. The belt slides over the heater surface by means of a lubricant. The minimal thermal circuit between the belt and the heater, and the low thermal mass of the belt cause these systems to reach operating temperature very rapidly, resulting in little energy wasted. However, the drawback in these belt fusing systems is that they inherently require high torque to drive them, due to the sliding friction between the belt and the heater.
Previous attempts have been made in the prior art to combine the best aspects of both types of fusing systems—the low thermal mass and minimal thermal circuit of a belt fuser, with the low friction and robust design of a two-roll fuser by the marriage of a resistance heater with a fusing roll. There are similar devices in industry, notably U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,940,045 to Sanpei et al., 7,026,578 to Mori et al., 7,024,146 to Kim et al., 7,046,951 to Kim et al., and 7,248,827 to Cho et. al. All consist of a metallic outer sleeve, a resistance heater, and a metallic inner core. All of these devices have a solid aluminum outer core, which carries with it increased thermal mass and correspondingly hampers warm-up time. All of these devices also focus on a common assembly process in that they are built from the outside in, by sliding the heater into the outer shell and locking the assembly together by fluid-forming the inner core resulting in the need for larger bearings which are more expensive than smaller bearings.
Thus, there is still a need for an innovation that will further reduce thermal mass and increase warm-up time and overcome problems encountered in the common assembly process.
The present invention meets this need by providing an innovation that is a heat roller with low thermal mass and minimal thermal circuit similar to that of a belt fuser but also with low friction and robust design similar to a two-roll fuser. The present invention advances on the resistance heated roll concepts in the prior art by dispensing with the outer aluminum core altogether, thereby reducing thermal mass and placing the heater closer to the surface of the roll where it's most useful. It is also characterized by a different manufacturing process, building from the inside out rather than the outside in to permit the use of a small diameter journal and bearings for the roller to run on in order to reduce costs of manufacturing.
Accordingly, in an aspect of the present invention, a heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device includes an internal tube; a sheet-like heating element having a resistance member deposited onto the outer surface of a cylindrical polyimide film strip; a compliant cylindrical insulating layer wherein the inner surface of the polyimide film strip is adhered to the outer surface of the insulating layer and the inner surface of the insulating layer is adhered to the outer surface of the internal tube; a cylindrical elastomer layer of predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the polyimide film strip; and a cylindrical outside surface applied to the outer surface of the elastomer layer wherein a toner image is fused on paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
In another aspect of the present invention, a heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device includes an internal tube; a rigid cylindrical insulating layer wherein the inner surface of the insulating layer is adhered to the outer surface of the internal tube; a heating element having a resistance member fixed to the insulating layer proximate to the outer surface thereof; a cylindrical elastomer layer of a predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the insulating layer; and a cylindrical outside surface applied to the outer surface of the elastomer layer wherein a toner image is fused on paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
In a further aspect of the present invention, a heat roller for an electrophotographic imaging device includes an internal tube; a heating element having a resistance member fixed to the internal tube proximate to the outer surface thereof; a cylindrical elastomer layer of predetermined thickness overmolded to the outer surface of the internal tube; and a cylindrical outside surface applied to the outer surface of the elastomer layer wherein a toner image is fused on paper from the outside surface by heat transferred from the heating element.
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
The present invention now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the invention are shown. Indeed, the invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Like numerals refer to like elements throughout the views.
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The foregoing description of several embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.
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